Clifford Rose as the Ghost with Kenneth Branagh’s Hamlet at the Barbican theatre in 1992. Photograph: Tristram Kenton/The Guardian.

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Clifford Rose as the Ghost with Kenneth Branagh’s Hamlet at the Barbican theatre in 1992. Photograph: Tristram Kenton/The Guardian.

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A quick series of semi-drawings! In a couple of months, I’ll be starting my final art project for school, which will be a “Hamlet” comic! It’ll be fairly short, just the final scene, but I’ve been working on character designs! These are all a little dated, as I’ve been drawing them more and more, but these are some basic ideas. More recent hamlet art by me 1 2 3
Hamlet's Ghost (2015) ⭐ 4.7 | Adventure, Drama, Family https://www.imdb.com/title/tt2224219/ Hamlet's Ghost: Directed by Walker Haynes. With Glen Mac, Creagen Dow, Walker Haynes, John Loprieno. A modern Shakespearean actor must travel back in time to confront enigmatic forces from the past and future.
Hamlet
Going the classical route here when it comes to famous fictional ghosts.
When I was looking up pics of Hamlet's ghost for ideas and references I came across one photo with the perfect composition to use. Unfortunately the pic was on pinterest and was pretty low quality at that.
I was eventually able to reverse image search (not google's, since it sucks now) and find out the name of the original file. Using that I was able to find what I think is the original post. Unfortunately the pic wasn't any bigger.
So I did this anyway. I also did a quick alternate version as well.
Non transparent under the cut
About Hamlet :
I read about the whole debate about what is the nature of the ghost in Hamlet. Is it really Hamlet's father's ghost ? Is it a devil ? And more importantly why Hamlet, who believes it to be his father's spirit, speaks to it with this lack of respect in the cellerage scene ? ("Ah, ha, boy, say'st thou so ? Art thou there, truepenny ?" ; "Well said, old mole." etc... Act I scene 5)
Well, apparently, one of the theories is that Hamlet cannot help but make a pun when he sees one ! He heard "swear" and immediately thought "He's asking for an oath but I'll go with an insult! One can play too." And if that's not unhinged emo behaviour I don't know what that is.
(Thank you P. Kapitaniak and your book Spectres, ombres et fantômes, discours et représentations dramatiques en Angleterre 1576-1642, for this kind of wonderful information.)

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He was a man, take him for all in all, I shall not look upon his like again.
Hamlet Act I, Scene ii
(thinking of my father on what would have been his 70th birthday)
"There are more things in heaven and earth than are dreampt of in your philosophy, Horatio."
William Shakespeare, English poet and playwright --Hamlet, act one.